Some have been with the Extract ISBN plugin - which I attribute to its usage of the new PDF engine and am more than willing to deal with. However, even with the plugin sometimes the entire application crashes with "Windows has encountered an error..."

Also, when I merge books it seems like it often crashes with "Windows has encountered an error..."

I've also started running into "Out of Memory" errors when editing PDF files around 20MB in size when I edit the title or author. (I assume because this causes a reorganization on disk of where the file is located.) I have 8GB of RAM, Windows 7, and generally have 60% memory free at the time according to Task Manager.

Just a moment ago I was editing the metadata on a DejaVu file and it hard locked on me when I tried to save the changes. I can't even end the process via Task Manager -- it's still running in the background. I'll need to reboot to end it.

Is there a log file somewhere that I can turn on for the "Windows has encountered an error" crashes? And where I can get more than a stack trace for the "Out of Memory" errors?

I have my ebook library on an external hard drive so I can cart it with me to work and use it for reference. The cord was the USB interface cable. My ebooks are the only thing on the drive which is why I didn't see any issues elsewhere.

He made a pretty good cut through the outer shielding and into the inner copper, but it was mostly intact. I'm not sure how the memory errors come into play (maybe paging to disk with Windows?) but they haven't occurred since I replaced the cable.

He's going to kill himself someday. He likes to hang out on the back of my monitor and chew on the cables back there, but those carry enough current to throw him into the next world. I try to keep him from doing it but... sigh, I think it's impossible. Damn stubborn birds.

Oh, as for watch dogs... my dog is an Australian sheepdog. 120 pounds of muscle. And he's terrified... absolutely terrified... of my bird. As is my cat. I will never understand the animal kingdom.